Saturday, 10 April 2010

a Wandre Oval on the front page of today's French newspaper Libération

Libé Wandre
To our American readers: don't look at the picture on the right, there is an exposed nipple!

Here at the Guitar Blog he highly appreciate Wandre guitars, so any opportunity to show one is to be taken. 
Today I was surprised to see a Wandre Oval - one of the most radical model of this hyper creative luthier - in the hands of a half-topless model recalling Delacroix's famous 'Liberty leading the people', illustrating an article about French artists' protest against the lowering of public subsidies (you have to know that there are no private funding for arts in France, no foundations or so, so everybody is dependent on State).

I have no idea why some photographer chose a late 50s Italian guitar to express today's French art, unless it just means that nothing better has been done since...



Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Gibson Thunderbird IV Zebra Wood bass



Thunderbird Zebra


You can't talk about Firebirds without mentioning its bass twin, the almighty Thunderbird
The Thunderbird Bass was also released in 1963, and with the same design, it seems almost more radical than the guitar, because at the time there was not so many other basses to compare with - Fender's pioneering Precision Bass was of course dominant, you had Gibson and Hofner's violin basses and Rickenbacker 4001, Fender's new J-bass and a few more models and brands... 
Thunderbird was also Gibson's first long scale bass (34" - actually, being European, I never really understood what " stands for!)

Here is a late limited release of 2007, made of zebra wood (an exotic wood from an endangered species that might have contributed to Gibson's recent trouble with law). I like the contrast between the elegant wood and the iconically rock design. Thunderbirds have pros and cons, I'm definitely pro - I play a new Epiphone Thunderbird Pro that is both versatile and with a strong personality, and I'm 100% happy with it.

bertram

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Friday, 9 April 2010

Gibson Barney Kessel Custom

GIBSON Barney Kessel
I didn't know so far the beautiful Gibson Barney Kessel Custom (there are also plenty of interesting guitars on this website) - and I don't remember ever seeing before a semi-hollow guitar with this kind of double florentine cutaways (the model presented here is the custom one with the Bigsby trem).

Its line is stunning, another example of what you can get when you slightly twist a classic design, it's both familiar and disturbing - a powerful combination. Actually when it was released in 1961 it wasn't so successful, probably too aggressive for its jazz target... This guitar was discontinued in 1973, but I'm sure that if Epiphone would release an updated version today, it would be a hit for all the post-Queens  of the Stone Age guitarists!

A similar but downsized design was used for Johnny A.'s signature Gibson model in 2003 - and it doesn't work, it looks like a SG front glued on a semi-hollow body, it doesn't have this generosity of the shape that you also find on some thinline Rickenbackers

And it looks super cool with black finish like here. Another guitar to put on my GAS dream list for when I suddenly become a billionaire without doing anything to make it happen.

bertram

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Thursday, 8 April 2010

ESP Phoenix II

ESP PHOENIX 11-SW3

I was searching about the Firebird legacy and I found one that is clearly rooted in it and more than a mere copy, the ESP Phoenix II. Unfortunately the result is not convincing, the lower horn is too wide, though its Rickenbacker style curve could have been nice. I keep looking, any suggestion is welcome.

BTW, a white finish with a black pickguard is one of my favorite finish.


Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Would you like a little Bossa Nova with your Fresher Straighter?

guitarz.blogspot.com:
Fresher Straighter?... that's a rather cheekily named brand/model, and with a rather cheeky headstock decal too. The word "lawsuit" springs to mind. It appears to be a rather accurate copy of an 1970s-era Ash-bodied You Know What, and is of Japanese origin.

This example has an unusual feature in the shape of a built-in drum machine of sorts, which is no doubt very crude by today's standards. Still, it makes a change from the endless Kay-brand LP style guitars with built-in effects which eBay sellers will insist are rarities.

Read more about Fresher guitars here.

G L Wilson

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Wednesday, 7 April 2010

August Carlstedt Ideal Harp Guitar

guitarz.blogspot.com:

This harp guitar by August Carlstedt is not the kind of instrument that turns up very often on eBay. The seller has listed it as a "double neck" and I suppose that is not an innaccurate description of it, but you'll notice from the closeness of the upper neck carrying the sub-bass strings to the main neck that the sub-bass strings are not meant to be fingered (I won't say "fretted" for obvious reasons). The sub-basses are intended to be plucked as open strings - the neck is there merely to support these strings. The designs of harp guitar vary wildly; many other brands employed winged extensions to the body where this guitar has the extra neck. I assume that the fretless fingerboard on this example is there for aesthetic purpose only.

I note that currently the guitar has only two of its four sub-bass strings present. Possibly, in its current condition with cracked body top it would not be wise to string it up with the full complement of strings. I am curious as to the presence of four additional bridge pins on the treble-side of the guitar's bridge, which would suggest that the guitar may have had even more extra strings. However, there are no tuners present on the treble side of the body, nor marks to indicate where they may once have been. Could the four extra bridge pins be merely an aesthetic touch so as give provide visual balance to the whole bridge design?

August Carlstedt, by the way, lived from 1861 to 1928 and was a Swedish immigrant who ran a shop in Chicago during the early 20th century, building instruments under the Ideal brand.

This beautiful antique guitar is, as already mentioned, in need of some restoration. No doubt it will appeal to a collector of harp guitars; hopefully someone who will lavish some attention on it.

For more on harp guitars, see the excellent www.harpguitars.net website.

G L Wilson

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

Gibson Firebird XII non-reverse

Gibson Firebird XII

A few days ago, GL was talking about the fact that 12-string guitars, that were once a standard in solid body guitars - a post-Brit invasion trend for sure -, became rare nowadays. I absolutely agree that it's a pity, and reduces the range of what you can do with a guitar! 

Here is a rare Gibson Firebird XII, a 12-string non-reverse version of the Firebird. The non-reverse body was produced between 1965 and 1969, when it appeared that the 1963 Firebird regular body - the reverse body as it's been called since the lower long horn felt so bizarre at the time - was a selling failure. Fortunately at this time Gibson was visionary enough to insist on its innovative designs, and the reverse body came back for good in 1972 (the non-reverse is quite ugly to me). Here you can find several photos of a Firebird XII, and you can see that it doesn't have the characteristic neck-through - another concession of the non-reverse phase...

I wish they'd issue one day a reverse body 12-string Firebird XII, that would really fit this guitar and its out-of-time feel (12-string doesn't fit much to rock but as I've stated here already, for me the Firebird is the guitar of Brian Jones and PJ Harvey and is a perfect brit-pop guitar).

Hey people at Gibson, are you reading the Guitarz blog? You know what you have to do!

bertram




Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Greco Firebird copy

Greco Firebird

Another Firebird, and a vintage black one (!), but it's not a Gibson, it's a Greco... 

I don't have more info about this guitar, but it looks like a faithful copy, obviously from the lawsuit era... Greco were so good at copying other companies guitars that they ended up as Fender Japan - just had to change the logo on their teles!

bertram

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Monday, 5 April 2010

Danelectro U2 Resophonic

guitarz.blogspot.com:

The seller of this Danelectro U2 resophonic guitar says that:
"Don't know too much about it but when I took it in to my local music shop they were fascinated by it. Said it was unusual to see a resonator on these guitars and that they were not cheap."
Yes, it is unusual indeed to see a resonator version of this guitar. These were not stock. I had a friend several years ago who had one just like this, and it was my understanding that a number of these Korean-made EVETS corporation Danelectro reiussues from the late 1990s were in fact modified into resonators by Holiday Music in Leytonstone, London.

As well as the original neck lipstick pickup, the guitar also has a piezo pickup fitted beneath the resonator cone allowing the electric and acoustic properties to be mixed. Note the re-located position of the controls on the upper part of the body. I don't suppose there was space left for them anywhere else.

By the way, my friend reported that it sounded fantastic.

G L Wilson

Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

Sunday, 4 April 2010

1964 Gibson Firebird I

Gibson Firebird I

Since we're busy with Firebirds, I'm happy to have the opportunity to present here a rare vintage Firebird I, with a single mini humbucker in bridge position and wraparound bridge. 
Less than 500 Firebirds I have been released in the early 60s as a budget model, this one seems to be in a fine condition for a 1964 cheapo - of course now it's a treasure ! 


Guitarz - The Original Guitar Blog - now in its 9th year!

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